♿️ NAVIGATING UNEVEN STREETS & CAMBER IN A WHEELCHAIR

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  • Опубликовано: 23 янв 2021
  • I ALWAYS GET ASKED, "HOW DO YOU DEAL WITH CAMBER IN YOUR WHEELCHAIR?" UNFORTUANTLY I CAN'T CANGE THE GRAVITATIONAL PULL OF THE EATHER, BUT I DO HAVE SOME FANTASTIC TIPS TO HELP YOU NAVIGATE UNEVEN STREETS AND CAMBER IN YOUR WHEELCHAIR. THESE WILL HELP CONSERVE YOUR ENERGY, SAVE YOUR SHOULDERS AND MAKE YOU WHEELCHAIR RIDE A LITTLE MORE EASY AND ENJOYABLE.
    SUBSCRIBE :bit.ly/2zSEo1R
    After suffering my spinal cord injury i have really had to adapt in life. So Im showing you my disability lifestyle to raise disability awareness. As a disabled woman and a woman in a wheelchair who is paralysed, I thought it would be interesting for you to see, and hopefully give you some inspiration and motivation so that you can live more independently. wether you are paraplegic or quadriplegic I hope that I can help you. The wheelsnoheels message is “so no one has to feel alone.”
    I have lots of interesting disability videos, a lot of videos on how to cope with a disability and living life in a wheelchair, wether you are a girl boy woman or man. i have some paraplegic exercise videos, and advice. its important to keep your fitness levels up as much as possible as this can when physically and mentally with depression.
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    •this video is just how I do it. there may be other ways which for for you. I cannot accept any responsibility for the actions you take after watching this video. You should always speak to a trained certified, medical professional first before undertaking any new activities.
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Комментарии • 157

  • @Wheelsnoheels
    @Wheelsnoheels  3 года назад +15

    Do you have any tips or advice? Let me know if you have any video suggestions. I really enjoy making these practical videos for you. If you enjoyed my video today, please consider buying me a ko-fi, Its kina like a tip. If you can’t do that, please subscribe, and share this video to help other who may need it, find it.
    Thanks for your support, and be sure to check out some other vides bellow.
    Gem
    SUBSCRIBE :bit.ly/2zSEo1R
    Videos to check out next:
    How to push your wheelchair correctly
    ruclips.net/video/6R9T-24ubz8/видео.html
    How to pop, hold, go up & down curbs in a wheelchair
    ruclips.net/video/gwa7hwpCCd4/видео.html
    How to open doors in a wheelchair
    ruclips.net/video/Y7shkhdbUM8/видео.html
    How to push a wheelchair for caregivers
    ruclips.net/video/7kvsEfoGVpY/видео.html

    • @beckymoran321
      @beckymoran321 3 года назад +1

      I left a request for a video on your last upload. 😁 love your videos 💜

    • @Wheelsnoheels
      @Wheelsnoheels  3 года назад +2

      @@beckymoran321 Oh fab, Ill have a look though. There were quite a lot of comments on that one :)

    • @lewisculverwellvlogs9789
      @lewisculverwellvlogs9789 3 года назад +1

      Can you do a what you do when you are at home video?

    • @SnowySpiritRuby
      @SnowySpiritRuby 3 года назад +4

      I'm actually jealous of the way your sidewalks are designed - in at least a lot of the U.S., there's just one steady slope on the sidewalks down to the street, so no chance of finding that "sweet spot". Same with the streets - I generally have to wheel ~10ft out from the curb in order to not completely wear out my uphill arm (I've got a SmartDrive on my chair, so I'm constantly using my uphill arm to apply resistance to the wheel to keep my chair from drifting down), because where I live, the middle of the street is flatter than the edge, like it has just a tiny slope across the middle section, but when it gets closer to the curb it gets a lot steeper.

    • @SnowySpiritRuby
      @SnowySpiritRuby 3 года назад +2

      @@morgancalvi6675 They're sloped like that for water runoff, which make sense, but they don't have to be quite THAT sloped to be effective. I mean, they need to be sloped a little so water doesn't just collect, but it still doesn't take much of an incline to make water roll down it. I'm just looking forward to the day when my town's city council finishes their survey of all the places in town that should have a sidewalk and/or curb cuts but don't (apparently that's been an ongoing project for a couple years now), and actually start putting them in where they're supposed to be; I've recently discovered that there are some corners where there USED to be a curb cut and it got replaced with a regular curb - that one makes me mad, because although I can get up curbs because I'm in a manual chair, I've seen other people out and about in my town who are in power chairs and mobility scooters, and I know they can't go up a normal curb in them, or even the half-curbs that two corners of one intersection have (I also got absolute confirmation that that intersection will be getting redone to eliminate that problem).
      And I agree, the power assist question really is a personal thing with no one-size-fits-all solution - different types work better for different people because everyone is different: for your situation, it happened to be the power assist wheels, and for me, it happened to be a SmartDrive.

  • @hannahwilliamson6477
    @hannahwilliamson6477 2 года назад +11

    Shout out to the guy working that made sure her wheelchair got though the road works without getting stuck

    • @pippinlatham4857
      @pippinlatham4857 27 дней назад

      Realistically he shouldn't have had to, if the work had been done to legal standards they wouldn't be in the way to begin with. It's the bare minimum for him to fix the mistake.

  • @amykathleen2005
    @amykathleen2005 3 года назад +20

    As a non wheelchair user I really appreciate this video to show how difficult it actually is manage such a journey. It really enlightened me.

  • @phh5447
    @phh5447 3 года назад +42

    It really makes me upset when the road is in better condition than the pavement. We complained since 10 years to get the one in front of our house fixed. Most wheeled persons use the road which is as we are on a corner very dangerous. I’m very concerned about our fragile gentleman with his Zimmer frame that can’t quickly escape as others might do. But no change to the thick gravel layer and overly patched pavement:( isn’t there anything nationwide we could do???

  • @CrystalMouse1
    @CrystalMouse1 3 года назад +12

    I hate having to pump one arm when there's camber it hurts so much!

  • @FreeBeerNoBingo
    @FreeBeerNoBingo 3 года назад +24

    I use a rollator walker and some of these wheelchair tips apply to walking with wheels, too. Rough surfaces are my nightmare - the vibrations just go straight through my arms, as well as the extra resistance. Most people near me have no idea that we live on a hill - it's not obvious, but it's exhausting!

    • @Aimee0206
      @Aimee0206 Год назад

      I recently started using a rollator - I genuinely didn't realise just how uneven the pavement was on the streets near me. There's the odd time where my rollator feels like it's at a 45° angle (maybe an exaggeration but not far off) - genuinely no idea how someone in a wheelchair would manage with it. Fortunately I'm physically able to manage with walking over uneven surfaces - I just need to remember to not lean to one side else I end up hurting my wrist the side I'm leaning on

  • @sdsfryX1
    @sdsfryX1 3 года назад +11

    Thank you so much for illustrating just how difficult day to day mobility in a wheelchair can be.

  • @JaneteB
    @JaneteB 3 года назад +19

    When I used to go out with my friends they always panicked that I was using the road because of how much smoother it is and also sometimes there isn’t a dropped curb so instead of getting stuck on the pavement I used to take the road

    • @CrystalMouse1
      @CrystalMouse1 3 года назад +2

      Oh the dirty looks I get! Walking people see a sidewalk and get so upset when they have to go around me on what they think is "their road" 😒

  • @imlovingthisxxx
    @imlovingthisxxx 3 года назад +5

    My wife has bike lights on her wheelchair so that when shes on the road shes that little bit safer.

    • @unetherized
      @unetherized 2 месяца назад

      This is genius and I'm stealing it! Thank you!!

  • @FueledByKass
    @FueledByKass 3 года назад +5

    I’m a wheelchair user but I use an electric chair, and wow watching your videos gives perspective on things I’ve never even considered.

  • @rockykoast7065
    @rockykoast7065 3 года назад +9

    Cambers, I quickly learned, are a real pain. One arm gets tired quickly. I tried going backwards to rest the tired arm, but that doesn't work because of how a wheelchair works...seems the effort still had to be made by the same arm...I sometimes grab the tyre on one side as it gives a but more force that side. ( I wear rubber-palmed DIY gloves to increase grip and avoid contact with anything dirty on the wheels, like dog poo...)

  • @empresschan3070
    @empresschan3070 11 месяцев назад +1

    I thought I was the only one that does no hands down hill, flicking hair😂... Thank you so much for the video ❤

  • @SohiTheTinyKittenHuman
    @SohiTheTinyKittenHuman 3 года назад +6

    I have a video from when the elevator that connects part of how I get from the top to middle of campus was broken.... so I found the multi-story car garage and rolled down it!!! It was an adventure.... and I had proof for my professor why I was almost 20 mins late to class..... heh!!

  • @HighTen_Melanie
    @HighTen_Melanie 6 месяцев назад +1

    Goodness Gem I can feel the pain! I was a fulltime manual chair user for many years before my disability progressed, and I now use a power chair full-time. I understand that every little bump and flat pavement can actually be torture for a wheelchair user. I’m kind of envious though because downhills were great fun and I miss that going at a constant speed! Good luck and thank you again for this video it’s fantastic advice especially for new wheelchair users xx

  • @twinswithwheels83
    @twinswithwheels83 3 года назад +9

    We love this video. Even though we use power wheelchairs and don't have the challenges of manual wheelchair users, there are a lot of similarities. Rough terrain is an issue for any wheelchair user. Especially cobblestones; they will make your teeth chatter and your back hurt. We also never knew that the bumps on the curb cuts were for the visually impaired. Really great info.

  • @JustWheelMe
    @JustWheelMe 3 года назад +5

    Gem I just had a thought. You said about the vibrations in your chair.... I have got wide soft roll front castors and they take vibrations away for me as the vibrations set off bad spasaming and my legs are dancing about so switched to them and it's amazing it legit cuts out like 90% of vibrations it's amazing. 👍 I thought it could possibly benefit you too. Xx

  • @unetherized
    @unetherized 2 месяца назад

    Thanks so much for posting this. I tried to take my dog on a walk in our neighborhood, and indeed it was an exhausting journey full of all these sneaky obstacles. Every foot we traveled was a hard won achievement! Those uneven pavements are just... watching your videos always cheers me up and I feel less alone and depressed about the challenges. Thank you!

  • @mikepasserotti4262
    @mikepasserotti4262 Год назад +1

    You have informed my decision to make my walkway better. As even and level as possible so you can't feel a camber. All transitions smooth. Thanks!

  • @1974AMDG
    @1974AMDG Год назад +1

    I thought the footpaths here in Australia were bad, but I'm starting to really appreciate them after seeing the state of yours in England! Also, your footpaths are so narrow! I alternate between using a mobility scooter and a rollator/walker and I will never complain again!

  • @rockykoast7065
    @rockykoast7065 3 года назад +10

    I usually have to move 3 or 4 wheelie-bins to be able stay on the pavement.. fairly easy when they're empty. ( I wrote to the 'mairie' ( french town hall) about it but the binmen/women still leave them on the pavement.. Often have to move onto the road because of cars parking on the pavement; dangerous because a) the road is quite busy. b) a wheelchair user is harder to see, being lower in height than an average adult pedestrian.
    I almost got run over the other day by a motorist reversing out. ( The parking spaces are the other side of the pavement to the road so motorists are obliged to cross the pavement - marvelous town-planning eh? :| ).

  • @monicadahlin
    @monicadahlin 3 года назад +1

    I started with a manual wheelchair about 10 years ago but I couldn't push myself because of my hypermobile shoulders so I got a normal chair with motorized wheels and it was OK for a couple of years. But then I changed to a power wheelchair and it was like heaven to be able to be out with my children! But it is hard to use a power wheelchair to sometimes, especially now in the winter! I live in Sweden and we have a lot of snow. I am very glad that people are so helpful when I get stuck in the snow.

  • @emilyniedbala
    @emilyniedbala 3 года назад +8

    I have been waiting for a video like this!!! I struggle so much...

    • @Wheelsnoheels
      @Wheelsnoheels  3 года назад +2

      I hope it helps. x

    • @canadianmum2040
      @canadianmum2040 3 года назад

      I’m right with you Emily!! It is not easy at all. I get terribly debilitating muscle cramps when I attempt to sit forward intuitively to gain imagined(for me lol) strength in prep for a hard part or thresholds of stores, and other establishments and oh gosh the sweating, and the need for a blanket of some sort as I’m not certain if this is a problem for everyone who uses a wheelchair but I already don’t have the ability to control my body temps with the temps outside. So I get super cold, to the point of the beginnings of hypothermia when it’s below 10°C a lot of the time, and if I’m overextended , fatigued, stressed, or some combination of the above and similar things make it happen even easier.
      So then the muscle cramps in my neck, jaw, upper abs, hands etc are so painful. I could kick my own self(if I could) lol for forgetting a blanket here and there, thinking it was warmer than I should have if I had checked the weather and current best estimate give it take 2 degrees either way(usually to the problematic of course-too hot/too cold) 🥶 🥵
      Ack! , I’ve written a snorer! Lol sorry bout that! 💗
      Love your channel Gem and adore you and your family! I look very forward to your videos!💗
      Hopefully decently warm not hot, weather will be upon us soon. Real spring would be so wonderful! 🥰🌈☀️😊
      I hope you’re well Gem and getting through things and still smiling!💗

  • @jailyndavis7186
    @jailyndavis7186 3 года назад +2

    Hi Gem, wondering where you got your black winter long body coat your wearing? looks handy!

  • @jimmiemarshall3215
    @jimmiemarshall3215 2 года назад +2

    I'm a new wheeler and it's quite an adjustment thanks for this video it safely shows how to navigate the difference in terrain😊

  • @sanastratus3998
    @sanastratus3998 Год назад +1

    This helped me so much. I couldn’t understand why I was finding the pavements so difficult. These tips are so useful, can’t wait to try them out!

  • @jamesrandall2009
    @jamesrandall2009 3 года назад +2

    it is difficult to describe all the problems you explained. well done

  • @joshdurrant9247
    @joshdurrant9247 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for the great tips! Awesome to see you back in action Gem, looking forward to wheels no heals 2021 because last year has helped me so much!👍👍💪💪😁😎❤️!

  • @maristua6679
    @maristua6679 3 года назад +2

    I always attache the FreeWheel to my wheelchair when going outside. Then I don't have to worry about uneven ground. I also always use glows both inside and outside when pushing myself in the wheelchair so my hands don't get dirty.

  • @amykathleen2005
    @amykathleen2005 3 года назад +5

    I've never heard the word camber before.

  • @mimivids2398
    @mimivids2398 3 года назад +2

    6:31 my parents would always say a triple drain meant a troll was following you 🤷🏻‍♀️😂

  • @blueSkies777
    @blueSkies777 2 года назад

    This is such a big help for a new user, TYVM!

  • @runaroundsueaccessibletrav6357
    @runaroundsueaccessibletrav6357 2 года назад +1

    This is my first week in a wheelchair having moved on from a scooter. I jad not appreciated how different it would be. Camber...... omg nearly ended up in the road. Never thought about camber really with the scooter now on the lookout. Great vlog 👍

  • @susugagalala3417
    @susugagalala3417 Год назад

    I agree with what you said and showed in the video. The problem is in some countries, like where I am in Singapore, wheelchair pushing or self-propelling is ILLEGAL on all asphalt roads built for cars, regardless of whether they are main, minor or narrow, seldom used roads.

  • @sacchapyar
    @sacchapyar 3 года назад +1

    Great informative video! Thanks Gem 💎

  • @firsty8056
    @firsty8056 Год назад +1

    Only been in a chair a couple of weeks after a below knee amputation but i've found with the hills where i am it's easier to go in reverse and use my good leg to help push me so i don't tire out my arms or feel like i'll tip backwards

  • @lucywilkinson6045
    @lucywilkinson6045 Год назад +1

    Fair play you make it look easy :)

  • @Christiebalazs
    @Christiebalazs 2 года назад

    I appreciate you sharing this and teaching so many 🥰🙏🥰

  • @pixie-jaynepickering1779
    @pixie-jaynepickering1779 3 года назад +17

    You might want to check the captions... you've already been 'fishing' and 'used your backend' (I'm guessing it should say Batek?) I'm deaf and rely on the captions, when they're wrong it takes me a while to work out what it should have said but by then the video has moved on...😢😢 I know I'm not the only person who uses the captions and I don't mean to be a pain, I just wanted to bring it to attention!❤❤

    • @Wheelsnoheels
      @Wheelsnoheels  3 года назад +6

      Ahhh thank you. I get the proffectionaly done. So its good to get some feed back. I think the aim for like 98% accuracy, Ill have a look tm. Thanks for letting me know x

  • @gBalldevelopmentllc
    @gBalldevelopmentllc 3 года назад +1

    I love your channel!

  • @sammysheartsgoodwin8835
    @sammysheartsgoodwin8835 3 года назад +3

    My wheelchair wheels at front get stuck on the low pavements crossing over sometimes and shop doorways. I think the council should re do the pavements, makes me angry when people park on the pavement so you can't get pass

  • @annettesuterswiss
    @annettesuterswiss Год назад

    Thanks for this advise.

  • @AssBlasster
    @AssBlasster 7 месяцев назад

    Now I'm glad sidewalks in Florida are almost always sidewalks or the rare asphalt bike trail...

  • @HopeAndSunshine
    @HopeAndSunshine 3 года назад

    Very interesting! I don't ride in a wheelchair, but I push my daughter in chair all the time. I can relate to some of your tips. There are definitely some terrains that we avoid, even on sidewalks. Large, loose gravel rocks are the worse!

  • @_Claire_Louise_
    @_Claire_Louise_ 3 года назад +2

    This is really helpful! I've only recently started using a wheelchair and the paths around our house are awful, they're all the gravelly texture, broken up by tree roots and on a camber. We've pretty much given up on them but have found that our local docks is a good place for a walk so as long as we can drive somewhere to exercise I'm good but if the government say it has to be straight from your door like in the first lock down things could get interesting

  • @travisjones1593
    @travisjones1593 3 года назад +1

    You are amazing I support your Channel

  • @fishfish7985
    @fishfish7985 Год назад +1

    Dealing with pavement slopes is very difficult with my rolator so I can only imagine , I also really hate the legally required slopes they put in when doing building work because of the edges and the angles they put them on I can't get my mobility scooter up them

  • @user-sx3zm3fx5o
    @user-sx3zm3fx5o Год назад

    Thank you for the info on the glove

  • @Miniselkie
    @Miniselkie 11 месяцев назад

    Every street in Philadelphia is so sloped it's like going sideways up a mountain

  • @jezzamarkham5285
    @jezzamarkham5285 2 года назад

    Great videos. Just thought i’d let you know a handy tip you might want to pass on. When i got my first chair it wasn’t an active user chair so i kept smacking my knuckles on everything!! After my knuckles looked like raw meat I suddenly remembered some gloves i had from when i road motorcycles.
    They are leather, waterproof, very comfy and most importantly have carbon fibre knuckle protection built in. I have 3 pairs, a short below wrist summer pair, a mid wrist in between pair and a long wrist winter pair with foil for in for added warmth retention.
    In an unadapted house or just out and about in the countryside they are really handy protection wise and keep the grott off your hands. Take care and keep on with the videos.😊👍

  • @davidjames229
    @davidjames229 3 года назад +2

    If you are using a powerchair, most of the issues are a lot easier to handle except the camber. On a sidewalk with a large slant (camber) of the sidewalk, you can’t drive straight. If you try driving straight ahead, you keep ending up heading for the low point of the sidewalk.

    • @runaroundsueaccessibletrav6357
      @runaroundsueaccessibletrav6357 2 года назад

      Yes this is exactly what I found i had not expected it. I also fin that when I leave go of the joystick to stop its not quick enough and I worry about rolling I to the road and then when I do stop I am pointing in the wrong direction. Fun and games
      .....

    • @ceseak1571
      @ceseak1571 10 месяцев назад

      And if it very sloped the nothing you can do to stop rolling in to the road. People don't understand that is safe to be in the road. 😢

  • @ladyamanda3572
    @ladyamanda3572 3 года назад +1

    I use a power chair and find so many things that annoy me when I’m out and about i.e cars 🚗 parked either on the pavement or across the drop curb
    Dog crap 💩 all over the pavement because owners are too lazy to pick it up
    Rude people who block doorways or pavements while they talk on mobiles or to another person
    People swinging wire shopping baskets near your face while shopping
    I could go on and on but don’t want to get on my soapbox
    Love your videos thank you for your hard work. Stay safe

  • @hiwagusu
    @hiwagusu 3 месяца назад

    I'm a new wheelchair user as my legs don't allow me to do long walks, like steps before I say hello to the floor.
    And I live in Norway... my arms are dead. My nails are broken. I have a lot of respect and admiration for you.
    Anyway, thank you for the advices !

    • @kortneykennedy7303
      @kortneykennedy7303 7 дней назад

      Take your clothes off all the way and play with your body down

  • @arshiyasidiqaa
    @arshiyasidiqaa 3 года назад

    Amazing video ma'am
    Lots of love from India 💚💚

  • @kellylyons1038
    @kellylyons1038 Год назад +1

    I did not know there was a name for the sloped roads. I thought Camber was a place in the UK 😅

  • @bluedeva
    @bluedeva 3 года назад

    Going up hill and dealing with cambers and pot holes are such a workout 🥵 cambered paths are a nightmare when im in my wheelchair and when I’m wearing my prosthetic leg as I tend to catch my foot and stumble more. As an above knee amputee I have to constantly watch every step I make to make sure my prosthetic knee doesn’t buckle. So using my wheelchair is sometimes the better option(more often than not). The wheelchair also means I’m not using as much energy and a lot of the time it’s saves me so much more time and I’m not in so much pain. I really wish planners and engineers could come up with a better option with much less cambers like they do in Europe Bless you Gem I hope you made sure to rest up when you got home. Good on Shauno for filming and walking backwards without falling over🤗🥰🤗

  • @jasonosborn5726
    @jasonosborn5726 3 года назад +7

    People who don't have to use a wheelchair never realize some walkways have very slight inclines.

    • @klasandersson7522
      @klasandersson7522 3 года назад +2

      As visiually impared I notice that, tilting roads and generally bad paving. My "eye" (My white stick)get stuck all the time in cracks and on lumps and bumps, so for you on wheels it must be a real nuisance! I complain about the difficulties, but rarely anything gets done about it, we are to few to make it "economical" for them to bother...

    • @jasonosborn5726
      @jasonosborn5726 3 года назад +1

      @@klasandersson7522 I spent a day a Disney World and by the end of the day, my shoulders hurts so bad I was almost in tears

    • @klasandersson7522
      @klasandersson7522 3 года назад

      @@jasonosborn5726 Ouch!!! 😣 All I have to show for it is the extra time it takes to get to/find point A to B and a sore shoulder...

  • @ecologist_to_be
    @ecologist_to_be 3 года назад +2

    So exhausting. No wonder you purchased a power wheel. lol

  • @tinachambers4887
    @tinachambers4887 3 года назад

    Hi Gem nice video Hi Sean o an D B have a great day love from TEXAS

  • @kaleb7931
    @kaleb7931 3 года назад

    Thank you for the video. When I was a kid it was 3 drains in a row was unlucky I still can't go over 3 drains.

  • @keltiqrennee
    @keltiqrennee 3 года назад +2

    QUESTION...
    Please...where did you get your leg warmer...the black down comforter???????

  • @batecridetoowoomba4563
    @batecridetoowoomba4563 3 года назад +1

    when was the last time they resurface the footpath it looks like about 100 years ago haha

  • @joshrees1985
    @joshrees1985 7 месяцев назад

    I’m in Australia and even in Sydney there’s places like this I have a powered wheelchair so it’s not so bad for me. I transition sometimes here too

  • @peterbarron1965
    @peterbarron1965 3 года назад

    Excellent educational Video Gem. I am a new fan. Can I suggest if you are using your chair more outside, you change to a slightly bigger front castor or wheels. U don't notice so many bumps ie those blind footpath bumps and it will also help you get up footpaths easier. But great Job.

  • @ilovebrean
    @ilovebrean 3 года назад

    You really are a pro I do go in the road a lot to as a lot easier

  • @MyPoetik
    @MyPoetik 3 года назад +1

    My friend has a wheelchair and i hate how hard she work on pavement 😬

  • @asecretcourtofcrowsandcloc4084

    I am visually impaired and have had mobility services since I was young, is there something similar people when they become wheelchair users to help them learn to do things like you mention staying on top of the camber, rolling over the domes, doing wheelies over the curb, looking ahead etc. etc.

  • @Paxaboll
    @Paxaboll 3 года назад +1

    Pedestrians have the right of way, but dead right doesn't make one less dead.

  • @huhn1964
    @huhn1964 3 года назад

    I wish I had started watching this young lady when she first started this vlog. This one is very interesting... I'd like to know what the curbs are like there compared to the US. Where I live, the curbs are like two inches. When you hit certain parts of the city, there are no curbs.

  • @nardisaya1757
    @nardisaya1757 Год назад

    Good🇲🇨

  • @cho5972
    @cho5972 3 года назад

    hi..can you share with us on how you clean your wheelchair after going out in a rain or muddy road or snow..and also what do you do when you go to the store and your wheelchair and hand is dirty from the kinda muddy road..
    bcz i always lazy to go out after rain,bcz i'm too lazy to clean up my wheelchair after that..hahah..
    thank you..

  • @andycraddock7677
    @andycraddock7677 3 года назад +1

    What a wonderful teaching video. Thank you ever so much. As a relatively new WC user (originally in a full manual ) I was able to convert to a hybrid chair, with Yamaha NaviOne wheels, paired up with the lithium ion batteries- and it’s made all the difference in the world. I’m wondering if you have considered a hybrid chair for yourself? (Pardons if you’ve discussed this in a previous video I somehow missed. I try to watch everything you post.) Pros: A hybrid, power-assist chair makes pushing, even up steep inclines or walkways all but effortless and the batteries provide power for miles of travel. More than I’ve ever done in a single day. Cons: The power-assist wheels do make the chair significantly heavier, and perhaps most unfortunately, they are hardly inexpensive, coming in at around $8,000 US for the system. I don’t know how your country’s NHS deals with this, but would highly recommend. Best wishes and please keep your great content coming!

    • @SnowySpiritRuby
      @SnowySpiritRuby 3 года назад

      I knew going into it all that I would need some form of power assist, so I looked them all up and decided that SmartDrive would be the best fit for me personally, since I lift my chair in and out of the car myself whenever I go somewhere. It still has its glitches, but it's definitely better than nothing, and allows me to get out and go wherever I want, including up a really steep hill and through a field of tall grass at a park near my house, as well as along trails surfaced with packed fine gravel. I'm waiting for the day when my town puts in sidewalks everywhere there aren't any, as well as curb cuts on every corner where there are sidewalks (our streets are abysmal - on one, I'm popping a wheelie every 10-15 ft to avoid getting stuck in cracks - and in order for me to not have to be constantly crossing the road every time I have to go in the street, I'm almost always confined to the sidewalk on the left side of the street - there's only one street that has sidewalks on both sides for the entire length of it).

  • @gabrielstone8548
    @gabrielstone8548 3 года назад

    You should do a video like this in Worthing. The pavements and roads are horrendous and dangerous for chair users. Add delivery vams on the pavements and it makes it impossible to stay safe.

  • @SohiTheTinyKittenHuman
    @SohiTheTinyKittenHuman 3 года назад +1

    I get you 1000%!! My college is sooo inaccessible!! Soo many wills! And to get from the top to bottom of campus can take me 40 mins because of the crazy rout I have to take.... when able bodied students can do it in 10-15 ... and it’d likely be impossible if I were in a powered rather than manual chair!

    • @davidbrouwers7309
      @davidbrouwers7309 3 года назад +3

      Do you mean manual vs power chair? Because an electric is a power chair.
      I'm about to get a power chair, much against my will, partly because of the issues with inclines and all that other "fun" stuff that makes rolling around hard. As a C7 quad I no longer have the strength and endurance to deal with it all without completely wrecking myself for the day and possibly the next compared to being a T9 para when steep hills weren't even an issue

    • @SohiTheTinyKittenHuman
      @SohiTheTinyKittenHuman 3 года назад +2

      Ha ha yes typo thank you

    • @Wheelsnoheels
      @Wheelsnoheels  3 года назад +1

      @@davidbrouwers7309 What electric options are you looking at?

    • @kyliemccutcheon9969
      @kyliemccutcheon9969 3 года назад

      Sophia, I hope you have brought this issue to the attention of the college. If you are able to fund it a Smartdrive attachment would be very helpful in this environment.

    • @SohiTheTinyKittenHuman
      @SohiTheTinyKittenHuman 3 года назад +2

      @@kyliemccutcheon9969 I have. They’re supposed to have a shuttle but I’ve only succeeded in using it once as before the ramp was broken and or I’d wait over N hour and it would never come. I’ve had to have campus police help me in their police cars before... kinda embarrassing. The accommodations office is great but there’s only so much they can do. They do mean well even ran half way across campus when my fire got stuck in the crack in the ledge of the door and couldn’t get out. They want to make it better but their ability to help is limited unfortunately.

  • @eduardopadilla5505
    @eduardopadilla5505 3 года назад

    A very tired road! :O

  • @millertas
    @millertas 9 месяцев назад

    Here in the land downunder it is compulsory to pick up your dog's feces and it is well policed. Is it the same in the UK?

  • @rubikspixel
    @rubikspixel 3 года назад +1

    If you live in an area with bad roadways and pathways I’d choose a slightly larger and wider caster as small casters (like inline skate wheels 3”) are more likely to get stuck in cracks and broken pavements and could trip you out of your chair, I’ve been in that situation and it’s not pleasant 👎🏼

    • @marvandthe4topz
      @marvandthe4topz 2 года назад

      Yes I used to have bigger casters and could even jump off big curbs without a hitch but with these smaller ones I’ve even had falls on small obstructions.

  • @wheelchairgeek
    @wheelchairgeek Год назад

    What brand of cosy toes are you using here?

  • @evelynkrull5268
    @evelynkrull5268 3 года назад

    Great video, no suggestion since im generally a walking person. I did want to say that your great funny tiktoks inspired me to start doing some myself 😊 my nickname there is "merferrets" (like otters cause they're mermaid ferrets)

    • @Wheelsnoheels
      @Wheelsnoheels  3 года назад +2

      Oh cool, Ill have to check it out. Im glad you enjoy my tiktoks xx

    • @evelynkrull5268
      @evelynkrull5268 3 года назад

      I just realized I never officially followed you, just searched for you regularly. Officially following now haha

  • @sarahkatielousiamccarthy7251
    @sarahkatielousiamccarthy7251 3 года назад

    How do you deal with crossing the road when there's a steep camber and uphill? I've had so many cars being impatient and that's nowhere else to cross.

  • @QueenOz
    @QueenOz 3 года назад

    Camber kills me

  • @islawebster1810
    @islawebster1810 3 года назад

    I love your chanel and your so sweet even though your desaibled.

  • @Amberleiful
    @Amberleiful Год назад

    Hi, tips for snow?

  • @batecridetoowoomba4563
    @batecridetoowoomba4563 3 года назад +2

    do you have any issues with cars parking on the footpath and you can't get past them so you have to go back and find a driveway to go down
    it's not good on a busy road especially if you're on your own and we often come across broken glass on the footpath as well

    • @theangijt
      @theangijt 3 года назад

      Yes i live opposite a special needs school parents always park on the pavement and often accross my drive. Meaning i cant get out, and if i do i can't get along the pavement. I am in a power chair but camber is a real problem, as soon as the castors get a track they are off and they take me with them no matter what you do with the joystick

    • @batecridetoowoomba4563
      @batecridetoowoomba4563 3 года назад

      @@theangijt yes I know exactly what you mean it has happened to me in the past that's why I use my batec when I leave the house now
      if I get stuck in the power chair I need someone to help me get unstuck using the batec I can unclip it and move it forward and reconnect again without any help

  • @vickeyp12
    @vickeyp12 3 года назад +2

    I had a nightmare experience navigating my town in a powerchair whilst my car was in for its mot. So many times I had to go on the main road due to no dropped kerbs. There were many super narrow paths with high kerbs. I'm a new user which added to the adventure! Where did you get your leg wrap from please? I want to find one that doesn't cover my feet.

    • @evercuriousmichelle
      @evercuriousmichelle 3 года назад

      I think she made a video on how she turned a winter coat into a leg wrap, I can't remember the title though!

  • @deborahtucker9702
    @deborahtucker9702 3 года назад +1

    Do you have to have balance to be able to hold a wheelie?

  • @nealeburgess6756
    @nealeburgess6756 3 года назад +2

    I am able bodied, but like to be empathetic to other's needs. So I actually went away for a weekend (2 nights), solo, using just a wheelchair from when I arrived to when I left, even in my hotel room. Fatigue was quite an issue. By bed time my arms ached from the effort. Other little insights. If you go into a lift forwards, when you get to your floor, you are arriving backwards, and the first time at that floor you don't know what is there! And opening the street door was something else. There was a little step, only about an inch, but I had to jump the casters on to it, then put the key in to open it without falling back off the step, then barge the door open against spring pressure. Quite easy if the door is held open for you, but seriously difficult when alone.
    Another insight from a different situation. I was working as a mobile mechanic. The car I was working on was blocking the pavement, and my van was in the street. Quiet residential street, little traffic, so unlikely to cause a problem. However, while my head was buried under the bonnet, I heard a voice saying, "Find a way, find a way". It was a blind lady with a guide dog. The dog had stopped because of the obstruction, but the lady had no idea what was there. Once I was alerted to the problem, I apologised to the lady, and explained that it was necessary to walk into the street to get past. And obviously I made sure it was safe with no cars coming. Just goes to show that something that looks like no problem to an able bodied person can be quite a difficulty to someone else.
    Best wishes to you and Shaun (Sean?).

  • @bywhacky7395
    @bywhacky7395 4 месяца назад

    I use electric chair and even with that I experience same issues

  • @jasminechiu5436
    @jasminechiu5436 2 года назад

    The city council really needs to do better with the roads....as a non-wheelchair user I am already livid seeing the conditions you constantly have to navigate in

  • @ChrisPage68
    @ChrisPage68 3 года назад

    My town is full of lovely tree-lined steets. Well, they LOOK lovely - until you try to push along the pavements, where the tree roots are undermining the surface. Plus, I live on a rise, so you have to go downhill to get to town. I hope you tweeted this video to your local council highways department. But they'll probably use the pandemic as an excuse not to do anything. So many things we need are pushed to the back burner, as if we don't count. 😤

  • @QueenOz
    @QueenOz 3 года назад

    Think I’ll swap to black jackets, my sleeves always become disgusting

  • @reachandler3655
    @reachandler3655 3 года назад +2

    I use electric wheelchair. I've had a few, I would caution anyone thinking of getting rear wheel drive chair, you come to a camber or downhill and the chair has a mind of it's own! I've had 2 rear wheel drive chairs try to kill me! I now have mid wheel drive chair and no problems.

    • @mydogeatspuke
      @mydogeatspuke Год назад

      An electric chair shouldn't move unless you tell it to, though. Whether it's switched on or off, as long as it's not in manual mode, it should remain completely still until you tell it to move.

    • @ceseak1571
      @ceseak1571 10 месяцев назад +1

      I had this with roads and nettles.

    • @reachandler3655
      @reachandler3655 10 месяцев назад

      @mydogeatspuke Ideally, yes. However, in practice, if whilst moving you come to a slope with a rear wheel drive, you're going down that slope wether you want to or not.

  • @jamesholt8620
    @jamesholt8620 3 года назад

    This is good but still harder for a electric chair

  • @dronegirl2024
    @dronegirl2024 3 года назад +1

    one of the big problems..but on a powerchair no problems..

  • @jeanetteisrandom
    @jeanetteisrandom 3 года назад +1

    is this common in the UK? I've never seen sidewalks that look so uneven?

  • @angelamangum3339
    @angelamangum3339 3 года назад +1

    What is cambr?

    • @kyliemccutcheon9969
      @kyliemccutcheon9969 3 года назад

      Camber is the slope of a surface. Pavement usually cambers toward the road to drain water toward the gutter. On broken pavement you get camber in multiple directions.

    • @angelamangum3339
      @angelamangum3339 3 года назад

      @@kyliemccutcheon9969 Thank you

  • @enyasavory156
    @enyasavory156 3 года назад

    I have been a full time wheelchair user as of January this year.
    My house has stairs and the area where I live isn’t wheelchair accessible and it’s so upsetting because I can’t go out by myself

  • @tomlee252
    @tomlee252 3 года назад

    it's always frustrating when you have to move about in tight areas, not made for wheelchairs, because you use your hands to maneuver around and sometimes your hands get squeezed trying to get from point a to b, people just don't get it, I've actually had people just stare instead help, really?

  • @chantellacollins1397
    @chantellacollins1397 3 года назад

    Why dont people in wheelchairs use electric chairs?

  • @bertiepimplebum5633
    @bertiepimplebum5633 3 года назад

    Mrs Gemma Hubbard, I'm repeating myself here. Will you consider creating a video where you learn how to cut hair. No chemicals used. Clipper/Trimmer manufacturer, Wahl, have a multitude of tution videos online for you to view. You see, if you do it others' will follow. I have a Wahl Clipper to send to you for free if you choose to do it. Your husband likely has a beard trimmer already. Self-grooming well is important for the disabled. You can show them how to cut others hair, too. It is easy. Have a look at the Wahl haircutting videos first. Whatever you do, others will do it too.

    • @evercuriousmichelle
      @evercuriousmichelle 3 года назад

      Brad Mondo already has great tutorials on how to cut your own hair at home. No need to recreate the wheel!

    • @bertiepimplebum5633
      @bertiepimplebum5633 3 года назад +1

      @@evercuriousmichelle ...Thanks for showing me another RUclips hairdresser. At first glance, Brad Mondo seems to use chemicals. I'm just thinking on haircutting and nothing else.

    • @evercuriousmichelle
      @evercuriousmichelle 3 года назад

      @@bertiepimplebum5633 Yes, he does use chemicals, but I've found his haircutting tutorials to be beginner friendly!

  • @georgecurtis6463
    @georgecurtis6463 3 года назад +1

    Jeez, where you live is beyond a mess. Do they ever fix anything there ? Yes, my big issues is actually issues but camber or the slant of the sidewalk is a killer. You cant even make a city block without ruining your arm. Here, the camber or slant is 2 percent. But in my city I got them to change it to 1.5 or less. Why ? Because I took a city engineer out in a wheel chair on a 2 percent sidewalk and he didnt make it 30 feet. But seriously, that area must be from ww1.

    • @katfoster845
      @katfoster845 3 года назад

      Better than most places in England. Councils have had budget cuts, so highways has been decimated.

    • @georgecurtis6463
      @georgecurtis6463 3 года назад

      @@katfoster845 yea, a lot of town and county cuts here also. But if there is a known danger then it must be fixed. Lawsuits cost a lot more. But what I saw was a failure not only to the disabled but to the people or residents. Parks do not carry weight over disabled and other improvements unless the parks get the money from the state or federal funds. Oddly, disabled funds seem near none existant but other funds are found easily, like ball parks. But an improvement to disability access ? Nope, seems to have found it's way to ballpark's. Odd.